‘Saturday Night Live’ vets arrive By Tom Lauder Senior Editor The Franken and Davis Show is coming to Lincoln. The University Program Council Talks and Topics Committee and KFMQ arc presenting “Behind the Scenes of ‘Saturday Night Live”’ with Emmy-award winning writers A1 Franken and Tom Davis on Mon day at 8:30 p.m. in the Nebraska Union. Admission is $2.00 for the general public and free to UNL stu dents with a student ID. Franken (the short one with glasses) and Davis (the tall one with glasses) have been writing and per forming comedy for 16 years since their start in stand-up to their stints with “Saturday Night Live” and their work in movies. The show is being billed as part comedy show, part discussion on comedy writing. “It’s basically a comedy show," Franken said in a phone interview. “I think the agent said, would you like to go out doing half a show, half lecture or something like that. And our lec tures are just usually people ask ques tions, stuff that they want to know about the show and show biz.” The two attended Blake School in Hopkins, Minn., where they worked up a comedy act. After high school, Franken studied social sciences at Harvard while Davis went to rock concerts, washed dishes and hitch hiked. They came home to Minnesota in the summers, performing their act in a club in Minneapolis. else, ’ he said. “It was healthy in a way. It’s hard to understand. It’s like comedy boot camp.” The prolific duo churned out some of the most memorable sketches.of Saturday Night Live’s” early run (such as Nixon’s Final Days, Dr. Shockley’s House of Sperm, the Afro Lustre commercial) and many sketches that never made it past the censors. Davis was instrumental in the creation of the Concheads, along with Dan Aykroyd. The pair also performed their own act, the Franken and Davis Show, during the early seasons. When Michaels left “Saturday Night Live” in 1980, Franken and Davis moved on. They continued to write and perform, especially on col lege campuses. They worked with Michaels again on the short-lived “New Show.’’The team also appeared in “Trading Places” and wrote and starred in their own film, “One More Saturday Night,” with Aykroyd as executive producer. When Michaels returned to “Sat urday Night Live” in 1985, he hired Franken and Davis as his producers. Franken hated the job. “It was terrible. But it was because we weren’t really the producers. We had that in name only. And we had a lot of unpleasant duties to do. “It was a tough year for us. And we took a lot of heat for the show. The show wasn’t very successful that year.” After that season, Franken and Davis went back to writing and work ing on outside projects. Lately, the two have been senior writers for “Saturday Night Live.” Davis per forms occasionally, and Franken has been on camera more frequently, doing bits like the Satellite Guy (a human satellite news-gathering unit covering the presidential campaign). They have just completed writing a TV movie for SCTV and “Little Shop of Horrors” star Rick Moranis. “It’s like a two-hour ‘Nightline’ type thing,” Franken said. “It in volves Rick as a live hostage reporter in Central America.” Franken and Davis also were plan ning to write a movie this summer, but the Writers Guild strike ended nego tiations. Davis, 32, is single. Franken, 33, is married and has a daughter, Tho masin (named after his partner). Both writers are currently on strike. ‘It was healthy in a way... It’s like comedy boot camp.’ —Franken Davis hitchhiked his way to Har vard during Franken’s sen ior year and the two “shared” Frankcn’s room. They began performing at the Im provisation in New York City on the weekends. Franken and Davis moved to Los Angeles in 1973 and soon were per forming at the Comedy Store, at rock concerts.on college campuses, and in Vegas and Reno. Their break into television came in July 1975. Their agent had given samples of their material to producer Lome Michaels. Michaels was put ting together a late-night comedy show and hired the two as writers. The show, of course, was “Saturday Night Live." Franken and Davis moved back East. They were the youngest writers on the young show, and they found themselves at the bottom of the peck ing order. “We were treated like we were the youngest,” Franken recalled. “Not too bad, though. There was definitely sort of an inner circle at first, but we broke into that fairly soon. “But the whole atmosphere of the place was such that everybody was merciless with everybody else.” Franken said he and Davis didn’t feel any different from anyone else. “Everybody abused everybody Pro-Boxing I S^Title Fight State Fair Park — 4-H Building Thursday, April 14 7:30 pm Advanced tickets available at Pickles — $lu.00 At the Door — $12.00 WHY o to those I small hole-in-the-wall bars? Thursdays the BIG PARTY is at (MI'MGLTS v 9TH & P TROPICAL THURSDAY & ROCK NIGHT 50C Draws 75C Mixed Drinks NO COVER ALL NIGHT Hawaiian Dress (shorts, etc.) Beer Relay at 11 p.m. POOL TABLES * VIDEO GAMES * DANCING * MUSIC \ VIDEOS * SPORTS BAR UPSTAIRS * ALL ROCK MUSIC -- Contact Travel— Discover Europe. with people your own age. All the fun and freedom without the hassle! Choose from 84 packages-escorted tours and independent hotel discounts. 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